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Ancient Chinese paintings can be traced back to as early
as 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, when people began to use minerals to
draw simple pictures resembling animals, plants, and even human
beings on rocks and produce drawings of amazing designs and decorations
on the surface of potteries and later bronze containers. However,
only a few of the works have survived over time. The earliest drawings
that have been preserved till today were produced on paper and silk,
which were burial articles with a history of over 2,000 years.
As far as the subject is concerned, Chinese paintings fall into
several categories, such as figure paintings, landscapes, and flower-and-bird
paintings. European paintings, introduced into China in 17th century,
were called "Western paintings," and the traditional local
works, "the Chinese paintings."
As the representative of Eastern paintings, Chinese paintings greatly
differ from the Western counterpart in terms of contents, forms,
and styles. The following will give you a more vivid picture of
the exotic Chinese paintings.
Colored Painting (gongbi) and Water-Ink
Painting (xieyi)
In terms of drawing skills, Chinese paintings can be categorized
into two styles: colored paintings and water-ink paintings, with
the former dominant before the 12th century by professional or craftsman
painters, and the latter in and after the 12th century by literati
painters.
Also known as "fine-stroke" paintings, colored paintings
feature close attention to details and fine brushwork. Thanks to
the mineral-made dyes, the original colors can be fully maintained
and the paintings will not fade away as time goes by. Colored paintings,
which manifest in themselves unparalleled sublime air, were widely
welcomed among the painters serving in royal courts.
On the contrary, water-ink paintings, also called "thick-stroke"
paintings, are supposed to convey spiritual resonance with strokes
as simple as possible, instead of attaching much importance to the
realistic subjects.
Exaggerated forms, such as generalization and hyperbole
as well as rich imagination, are employed in painting to display
painters' feelings. Therefore, it is relatively difficult to make
a copy of a water-ink painting.
Anyway, there is no absolute line between the two schools. No matter
which school they belonged to, painters could and did compromise
a little and learn from each other, giving rise to a mixed style
including elements from both.
A perfect integration of poetry,calligraphy, painting
and seal engraving
Traditional Chinese paintings perfectly integrate poetry, calligraphy,
painting, and seal engraving, all of which are necessary components.
As Chinese is an ideographic language system, most of the Chinese
characters in ancient times were produced with concise strokes according
to the shapes or meanings of the signified, which naturally generated
an artistic form of calligraphy closely connected with painting.
Chinese painters, in particular literati painters, would
unconsciously draw with the styles of calligraphy. Writing poems
became an established way to express their feelings during the process
of drawing. In the end, according to the tradition of Chinese literati,
red seals with their names engraved were used to sign their works,
a tradition that continues to this day.
Actually, Chinese paintings clearly reveal that Chinese think in
a holistic way. In other words, before drawing, painters must have
an overall planning concerning the content of poems, the style of
calligraphy, and the place where the works should be signed. The
criterion of "Painting in poetry and poetry in painting"
for excellent works was originally set by Sushi (1036-1101), the
well-known painter and litterateur in the Northern Song Dynasty(960-1127).
Other painters later held this idea in high esteem.
An obvious distinction between Chinese and European paintings lies
in the fact that a piece of blank space is always reserved in Chinese
paintings for clouds over mountains, fog haunting above rivers,
light circles reflected from the sun or the moon, or nothing at
all. Some argue that the "blankness" in Chinese paintings
is the most appropriate vehicle to convey the uncertainty and ambiguity
featured in Chinese poems.
Figure paintings, landscapes and flower-and-bird paintings
Ample evidences can be found in fine-art archeology that paintings
with people as the subject turned out to be the earliest one among
all the categories of Chinese paintings and used to enjoy prosperous
development. Dating back to the primitive age, ancestors drew pictures
of human beings and animals on walls and rocks with white stalks,
red bauxite, or charcoal.
However, figure paintings didn't get fully developed until 1,500
years ago, when Gu Dangzhi (348-409), the famous painter and art
theorist, asserted that more attention should be paid not only to
the external shapes of figures, but also the internal quality. Hereafter,
this argument was accepted by artists and critics and taken as an
established rule guiding the future production and comments of similar
works.
As the most important and most influential category among Chinese
paintings, the landscape paintings, which came into being much later
and developed quickly in the Tang Dynasty(618-907), usually take
images of natural scenery, such as mountains or rivers, as the subjects.
Over the long history of paintings in ancient China, the largest
portion of painters specialized in landscapes.
Landscape painting could reach its heyday and maintain its dominant
role in Chinese paintings because of its deep root in Chinese traditional
culture. Chinese philosophers in ancient times believed in the "unity
of human beings and heaven," which means that human beings
can feel nature and therefore should be in a harmonious relationship
with it.
Having widely accepted this argument, which is different
from the Western one that nature should be conquered, Chinese painters
tended to integrate their feelings and dreams into the natural scenery
they were producing, which meanwhile arouses aspiration and imagination
from readers.
With flowers and grass, bamboos and rocks, birds and beasts, and
worms and fish as the major subjects, flower-and-bird paintings
are usually viewed and admired by viewers. The most frequently seen
pictures feature a combination of flowers and birds, hence the flower-and-bird
name.
Originally designed for craftwork, flower-and-bird painting eventually
established itself as an independent school in the Tang Dynasty. What's
more, considered sublime and elegant by literati in ancient China,
the so-called "four gentlemen" including plum, orchid, bamboo,
and chrysanthemum (mei, lan, zhu, ju) are the most welcomed subjects
in Chinese flower-and-bird paintings.
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